"Margaret atwood speech" Essays and Research Papers

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    Frost and Journey to the Interior by Margaret Atwood portray the concept of journeys to a great extent. These poems will show a whole other perspective of a literal inner and imaginative journey and a metaphorical physical journey. In the poem “The Road Not Taken”‚ Robert Frost provides a look at the choices one has in life‚ how one comes to decide which choices are better‚ and what the consequences of these choices are. In “Journey to the Interior”‚ Margaret Atwood uses the physical terrain of the Canadian

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    “Free speech is not to be regulated. The audience that hissed yesterday may applaud today‚ even for the same performance.” –Michael Douglas Undoubtedly‚ a speaker moulds his/ her speech by the principles of purpose‚ and the audience who are to receive the given speech. More than this however- the responder’s context also shapes the way in which they interpret a speech. Michael Douglas- famed actor and movie director‚ contrasts an audience’s response in his quote‚ to emphasise that a responder’s

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    The novel goes immediately into an unfamiliar‚ unexplained world‚ using unfamiliar terms like “Handmaid‚” “Angel‚” and “Commander” that only comes to make sense as the story progresses. In this novel‚ Margaret Atwood tells more than the story of Offred‚ the story of Gilead‚ and the story of a society set in the future where women are classified depending on the status of their husbands and the status of their “ovaries”. Their function is to be impregnated

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    Margaret Atwood’s portrayal of the sirens is that they are irresistible and liars. Homer’s portrayal of the sirens is that they are evil‚ seductive creatures. In her poem‚ Atwood begins her poem with a warning to inform her audience about how powerful and scheming these creatures truly are with their "...song that forces men to leap overboard in squadrons even though they see the beached skull..." Here‚ she incorporates imagery to prove to her audience how irresistible and dangerous the sirens

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    There will always will be a power or a government with a society. Whether it be as small as a group or as large as a country. According to multiple sources‚ government has been around since the first city-state was created. Just by this source alone we demonstrate how society has always needed an order and power: Government. Dystopian: An imagined place or state in which everything is unpleasant or bad‚ typically a totalitarian or environmentally degraded one. Lord of the Flies‚ a novel that is realistic

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    This quotation was taken from Margaret Atwood’s story‚ "Homelanding." This story recounts many aspects of human existence from an outside view‚ as if it was being told to an alien race. This story tells about human appearance‚ sex (both difference and the act of)‚ sunbathing‚ sleeping‚ death‚ and many other human functions in a scientific way. This story takes a step away from the normal way of describing these objects. For example‚ Margaret Atwood talks about eating and describes it by saying "I

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    “Dystopian literature invites the reader to reflect upon the mutability of identity.” By comparing The Handmaid’s Tale and The Road‚ discuss how far‚ and in what ways the two novels support or refute this claim? Within dystopian literature‚ identity is something that can be seen as an individual’s most core and precious element. Exposed against a scarcity of freedom in self-expression‚ we can begin to fully appreciate and understand the importance in the role of identity as well as its robustness

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    Margaret Atwood‚ well known for her illustrious enhancement of Canadian Literature‚ claims what distinguishes Canadian writing from the American or European writing is the theme of survival Canadians have experienced. Now‚ with people from all over the world immigrating to Canada there is a struggle to survive through the preservation of their cultures while living in one that is dominantly English and French. There is tension between the English‚ French‚ First Nations and many other cultures that

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    Bibliography: AtwoodMargaret. Oryx and Crake: a Novel. Toronto: Vintage Canada‚ 2009. Print. Hegland‚ Jean. Into the Forest. New York: Bantam‚ 1998. Print.

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    Endings” by Margaret Atwood‚ she describes five different scenarios in which a man‚ John‚ and a woman‚ Mary have different lives and situations in each one. Each story is described and then always ended the same. The characters are happy and then they die. Atwood makes this point when she says‚ “John and Mary will die. John and Mary will die. John and Mary will die.” Using this method of repetition gives the reader thoughts about each scenario on its own. Throughout the scenarios‚ Atwood is very curt

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